The Well of Infinite Love“Deep at the heart of your being there is a well of infinite love…” ~Louise Hay
This simple affirmation from Louise Hay points to a radical idea: what you’re seeking most—love, peace, safety, belonging—is not “out there” in other people, achievements, or circumstances. It already exists within you, as an inner source that can never truly run dry.
But what does that really mean? Where is this “well”? How do you access it? And how do you drink from it in a world that often feels starved of love and peace?
Where Is the Well?
The “well of infinite love” is not a physical place. It’s a state of consciousness.
You might call it:
- Your true self beneath all conditioning
- Your heart center, where compassion and tenderness live
- Your soul, the part of you that never feels separate from life
Most of the time, we live at the surface—lost in thoughts, to-do lists, worries, and self-judgment. The well is “deeper” than that surface. It’s felt in the quiet spaces: pauses between thoughts, moments of awe, tears that come out of nowhere when you’re moved by kindness, beauty, or truth.
You’ve already touched this well in moments when:
- You felt love for someone with no agenda, just pure caring
- You looked at nature and felt suddenly calm and connected
- You forgave someone and felt your chest soften and open
Those moments weren’t given to you from the outside; they arose from within. That is the well.
How Do You Access This Inner Well?
Accessing the well is less about “finding” something new and more about removing what blocks it. The blocks are familiar:
- “I’m not good enough.”
- “I don’t deserve love.”
- “I’ll only be okay when _____ happens.”
Louise Hay often suggested beginning with gentle, persistent self-talk to melt those blocks. Here are three simple access points:
- Presence in the Body
The well lives in the present moment, not in mental stories about past or future.
- Place a hand on your heart or chest.
- Take a few slow breaths, slightly longer exhale than inhale.
- Ask quietly inside: “What am I feeling right now, underneath the noise?”
Just this turning toward your inner experience—with kindness instead of criticism—begins to open the well. Love begins with honest, non-judging attention.
- Tender Self-Talk
Your nervous system listens to your words. When you harshly criticize yourself, you move away from the well. When you speak with tenderness, you move closer.
Try something like:
- “Sweetheart, I know you’re trying.”
- “It’s okay to feel what you feel.”
- “Even now, I am willing to see myself with love.”
You don’t have to believe these fully at first. Think of them as gentle knocks on a door that has been closed for a long time.
- Willingness to Feel
The well is covered not only by judgment, but by unfelt feelings—grief, fear, shame, anger. When you allow yourself to feel, without making a story about it, you clear the path to the deeper love within.
You might say:
- “I’m willing to feel this sadness and hold it with kindness.”
- “I don’t have to fix this feeling, only to be with it.”
Love isn’t the absence of pain; it’s the presence that can hold pain.
How to Drink Deeply from the Well
Once you begin touching this inner source, “drinking” from it means letting it influence how you relate—to yourself, to others, and to life.
- Start with Yourself
You can’t pour from an empty cup, but more accurately, you can’t feel the well while treating yourself like an enemy.
- Offer yourself one loving act a day: rest, a walk, a nourishing meal, saying no when you mean no.
- Practice one loving thought a day: “I am learning to be on my own side.”
Each small act is like lowering the bucket into the well and taking a sip.
- Extend It Outward
The more you connect with this inner love, the more naturally it wants to flow outward.
- Offer silent blessings: “May you be well, may you be peaceful” to people you see.
- Look for one opportunity each day to be kind: a smile, a listening ear, a small generosity.
You’re not manufacturing love; you’re allowing what’s already inside to move through you.
- Let the World Be Thirsty—But Don’t Join the Drought
The world is indeed thirsty for more love and peace. But if you join the collective fear, rage, and despair without any inner anchor, you’ll feel drained and hopeless.
Instead:
- Stay informed, but balance it with time in nature, silence, creativity.
- Ask, “What is one small, concrete act of love I can offer today?”
You quench the world’s thirst not by fixing everything, but by not abandoning your own well.
Living from the Well
To live from the well of infinite love is a practice, not a perfect state:
- You forget, then remember.
- You close, then soften.
- You judge, then choose again to be kind.
Every time you turn inward, breathe, and say, “Somewhere inside me, love is here,” you’re honoring Louise Hay’s affirmation. You’re affirming that the deepest truth of who you are is not your fear, not your wounds, not your past—but the quiet, enduring presence of love itself. And from that presence, you become exactly what this thirsty world needs: a living reminder that the well has always been within.
Learn how you can learn to draw more from the blessings of this well and share it with others to make the world a better place
https://louisehayusa.com/
